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Police: Man pretended to be pilot

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Pilots sense colleague is a fake when he can't strap into cockpit's jump seat

Frenchman is a retired winemaker traveling from France to Florida

Police say man boarded US Airways plane in Philadelphia posing as a pilot

He allegedly entered cockpit after being told business class was full, police say

The angry Frenchman came upon an audacious solution when he couldn't fly business class, a plan worthy of "Catch Me If You Can."

Told the section was full, Philippe Jeannard just went into the cockpit and pretended to be crew, even dressing the part, police allege.

Unlike Leonardo DiCaprio in the film based on the true story of a successful con artist posing as a pilot, Jeannard was caught right away at Philadelphia International Airport and is now being held on $1 million bail, Philadelphia police said Friday.

The 61-year-old later remarked that he "hated Americans," said police, who are still ascertaining his exact motive.

Jeannard, who is from La Rochelle, on the west coast of France, is a retired winemaker who was on a layover from France and was changing planes to his final destination in West Palm Beach, Florida, said Philadelphia Inspector Joseph Sullivan.

There's no indication that Jeannard was drunk, but he appeared to have had some drinks, Sullivan said.

Police arrested the man on charges of trespassing, impersonating a public servant and lying to police, Inspector Joseph Sullivan said.

The FBI is also investigating, a spokesman said Friday.

The incident occurred on a US Airways flight, Philadelphia police say.

Jeannard boarded the plane Wednesday evening wearing a white button-down shirt with an Air France logo over the pocket and a black jacket with four gold stripes on the epaulets, akin to one worn by pilots, police said.

He also was carrying a bad fake of an Air France crew badge and a fake crew identification card, according to police and Air France spokesman Cedric Leurquin.

Before he boarded the US Airways flight, Jeannard had a disagreement with airline personnel who could not accommodate his request to be upgraded to business class, police said.

Police believe he sauntered into the cockpit while passengers were boarding the plane. The pilot's door is usually open at that time, police said.

A flight attendant conducting a routine head count entered the cockpit and saw the man sitting in the jump seat behind the captain's seat. He identified himself as an Air France pilot.

At least two pilots were doing preflight checks on the Airbus when the man entered the cockpit, Sullivan said.

"He identified himself as a pilot and started to sit in the jump seat. But he immediately had a problem getting strapped in and it was obvious to the real pilots that he couldn't be a pilot," Sullivan told CNN. "He didn't know what he was doing."

The flight crew told him he would have to fill out paperwork, but the man didn't have credentials, police said. The captain then told him to leave the area, and the man became irate, police said.

Unable to calm him down, the flight crew escorted him off the plane, police said.

An airline agent tried to rebook him on another flight while U.S. Airways corporate security was notified, police said.

When corporate security realized they had a possible crime on their hands, the man had left the terminal for his rebooked flight, police said.

Corporate security contacted Philadelphia police, who found and arrested the man at his new terminal, Sullivan said.

The original U.S. Airways flight departed.

Was the act a fit of pique or a prank?

Police say they don't know whether the suspect was simply a prankster trying to mimic Frank W. Abagnale Jr. or he had other motives. (Abagnale -- who infamously eluded authorities for years in the 1960s while posing as, among other things, an airline pilot, a doctor and an attorney -- was the inspiration for the 2002 film "Catch Me If You Can," starring DiCaprio and Tom Hanks).